Hrithik Roshan (Hindi: ऋतिक रोशन, Urdu: رتک روشن, pronunciation: /rɪt̪ɪk roːʃən/) (born Hrithik Roshanlal Nagrath on January 10, 1974), is a prominent Bollywood actor and five time Filmfare Award winner.
Career
Roshan's first movie role was as a child artist when he was six years old in the 1980 movie Aasha, when he appeared in a dance sequence as an extra. Roshan went on to appear in Aap Ki Deewane (1980) and Bhagwan Dada (1986) playing minor roles. Roshan then became an assistant director for his father's films Karan Arjun (1995) and Koyla (1997).
Roshan made his debut as a leading man in the 2000 film Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai opposite another debutante actress Amis...

Linda Susan Boreman (January 10, 1949 (birth time source: Astrodatabank, Ivan Martin) – April 22, 2002), better known by her stage name Linda Lovelace, was a pornographic actress in the 1972 film Deep Throat, who went on to leave the pornography industry and became a spokeswoman for the anti-pornography movement.
Deep Throat was notable for beginning a brief fad of porn chic; it was also the inspiration for Bob Woodward's name of his secret Watergate source, W. Mark Felt. Boreman later stated that she regretted her pornographic career and had been violently coerced into pornography by her then-husband, Chuck Traynor; she also renounced her stage name and reverted to using her real name in public. The popularity of the film, however, made her a cultural icon against her will, appearing i...

Roderick David Stewart, CBE (born January 10, 1945), is a Scottish / English singer born and raised in London. He describes himself as a "Scottish rock singer", owing to his parentage. He considers himself as a true Scot. He was a member of the The Jeff Beck Group and the Faces. He was also briefly in a band entitled Roddy Rod and the Dynamic Duo with fellow band members Mark McCallister and Sammy Pierce before embarking on a solo career. His wife is model Penny Lancaster.
With his career in its fifth decade, Stewart has achieved numerous hit singles worldwide, most notably in the UK, where his tally of 62 hit singles includes 24 that went Top 10, of which six went all the way to number one.
It has been estimated that Stewart's album and single sales total more than 250 million, easi...

Évelyne Thomas (born January 10, 1964) is the hostess of the French talk show C'est mon choix (It's my choice).
In 2003 she was controversially chosen as the new Marianne. The town mayors who elect her went for a populist choice, which was at odds with the views of the Parisian intelligentsia. This was compounded by her stating that, while she was in favour of liberty and fraternity, she opposed equality, which implied making everyone the same. See Liberté, égalité, fraternité....

Pat Benatar (born Patricia Mae Andrzejewski on 10 January 1953) is an influential four time Grammy Award winning US rock singer with many million and multimillion selling records worldwide. Benatar was one of the top female rockers of the 1980s and early 1990s.
Pat Benatar was born Patricia Mae Andrzejewski (AND-zhe-YEV-skee) in the Greenpoint neighborhood of Brooklyn, to a Polish/Irish family. She initially studied voice and opera, following in the footsteps of her mother while growing up in Lindenhurst, New York, on Long Island. After graduating in 1971 from Lindenhurst High School Benatar married her high school sweetheart Dennis Benatar that same year and took his name.
Benatar immediately moved with her husband to Richmond, Virginia where she worked as a bank clerk and sang at n...

Aahoo Jahansouzshahi, also known as Sarah Shahi (born January 10, 1980, in Euless, Texas, U.S.), is an American actress, model and former NFL Cheerleader of Iranian and Spanish descent, a descendent of 19th century Iranian Shah Fat′h Ali Shah Qajar. Shahi was named #90 on the Maxim magazine "Hot 100 of 2005" list; she moved up to #66 in 2006.
Height: 5' 3" (1.60 m)
Early career
Shahi started her career as a beauty queen during her teen years. She won the Miss Fort Worth USA pageant in 1997. After studying opera, she joined the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders 1999-2000 squad. She appeared on the cover of their 2000 calendar.
Acting career
While working as an extra on the set of Dr. T and the Women, she met director Robert Altman, who encouraged her to move to Hollywood. Sara...

George Edward Foreman (born January 10, 1949) is an American two-time World Heavyweight Boxing Champion. He became the oldest man ever to win a major heavyweight title when, at 45, he knocked out 26-year-old Michael Moorer in the 10th round. Foreman still holds that distinction and has been named one of the 25 greatest fighters of all time by Ring Magazine. Nicknamed "Big George", he is now a successful businessman and an ordained Christian minister who has his own church.
Foreman has 10 children, and each of his five sons is named George: George Jr., George III, George IV, George V, and George VI. He is able to distinguish one from another by the use of nicknames such as "Monk", "Big Wheel" and "Little George". His five daughters are Michi, Freeda, Georgetta, Natalie, and Leola.
Ear...

Salvatore "Sal" Mineo, Jr. (January 10, 1939 – February 12, 1976) was a Golden Globe-winning American film and theatre actor, best known for his Academy Award-nominated performance opposite James Dean in the film Rebel Without a Cause.
Mineo, born in The Bronx, the son of a Sicilian coffin maker, was enrolled by his mother in dancing and acting school at an early age.
Acting career
Mineo had his first stage appearance in The Rose Tattoo (1950), a play by Tennessee Williams. He also played the young prince opposite Yul Brynner in the stage musical The King and I.
After a few more film and television appearances his breakthrough was Rebel Without A Cause in which he played John "Plato" Crawford, the sensitive teenager smitten with Jim Stark (played by James Dean). Mineo's biographe...

Zuria Vega is a Mexican actress. Daughter of actor Gonzalo Vega and Leonora Sisto, she is the third of three siblings: Marimar Vega, also actress and Gonzalo Vega. She currently works for Grupo Televisa.
Personal life
She was born in Ciudad de México, the 10th of January 1989. She started her career as a girl as an axtra in the play "La Señora Presidente" protagonized and directed by her father. At age 17 she was selected to participate in the series S.O.S.: Sexo y otros Secretos as "Roberta", daughter of Luz María Zetina. In January 2008, Roberto Gómez Fernández and Giselle González gave her the role of "Renata Higareda" in the telenovela Alma de Hierro alongside Alejandro Camacho y Blanca Guerra among others. In January 2009, the producer Nathalie Lartilleux gave her the starring r...

Joseph Lyle (Lyle) Menendez (born January 10, 1968) and brother Erik Galen (Erik) Menendez (born November 27, 1970) were convicted in a highly publicized trial for the shotgun murders of their parents, Jose and Kitty Menendez, residents of Beverly Hills, California.
The parents
Jose was born in 1944 to an upper-middle class family in Havana, Cuba. His father was a well-known soccer player who owned his own accounting firm. His mother was a swimmer who was elected to Cuba’s sports hall of fame. Jose had two older sisters, Teresita, known as "Terry", and Marta. Although the family was not rich, Jose’s parents’ accomplishments in sports guaranteed them an honored place in Cuban society. Jose was five years younger than Terry and was spoiled and adored by his mother.
Kitty was born in 1...

Jean-Claude Jitrois, born January 10, 1944 in Narbonne, is a French businessman.
Biography (source : http://www.praguefashionweek.com/en/designers/jitrois/ )
Jean Claude Jitrois had an unusual career path since he first began by psychology. In his early years, he taught psychology at Nice University. Also a clinician and a therapist in psycho-motility, his start was a recognized and promising one, being the author of several books (among which one « Que sais-je ? » about psycho-motility). Then he saw in clothes another type of skin that the body can wear every day. This is the first and most obvious skin, and you simply don’t have the choice, as society imposes it to you through its codes. Bodies, while they are moving, communicate through clothes, and help personalities to strengthe...

Cash Warren was born as "Cash Garner Warren" in Los Angeles, California on January 10, 1979. He is an American producer, the son of actor Michael Warren and husband of actress Jessica Alba.
Alba married Cash Warren (son of actor Michael Warren) on Monday, May 19, 2008 in Los Angeles, California. Alba met Warren while making Fantastic Four in 2004. On June 7, 2008, Alba gave birth to a baby girl, Honor Marie Warren, at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California..The first pictures of Honor Marie will appear in OK! magazine, which paid a reported $1.5 million for them.
Alba's charity work includes participation with Clothes Off Our Back, Habitat for Humanity, National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, Project HOME, RADD, Revlon Run/Walk for Women, SOS Children Vill...

Marina Hands (born January 10, 1975) is a French stage and film actress.
Biography
Hands is the daughter of British director Terry Hands and French actress Ludmila Mikaël, and the granddaughter of painter Pierre Dmitrienko. She studied acting at the Cours Florent and the CNSAD in France, and the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art in England. In 1999, she made her stage debut in Le bel air de Londres by Dion Boucicault, and was nominated for a Molière Award. Her first film was Andrzej Żuławski's La Fidélité (2000), followed by The Barbarian Invasions (2003). She then appeared in Les Âmes grises (2005), for which she was nominated for the César Award for Most Promising Actress, and Ne le dis à personne (Tell No One) (2006).
Her most notable performance to date was in ...

Travis Gibb, born January 10, 1981 in Miami, Florida, is the son of Barry Gibb. Gibb married a former "Miss Edinburgh (Scotland)" Linda Gray on September 1, 1970, choosing Barry's birthdate "so he wouldn't forget anniversary" according to Linda from a 1979 biography of the BeeGees. They have 5 children: Stephen (1973), Ashley (1977), Travis (1981), Michael (1984), and Alexandra (1991). He has four grandchildren: Nina and Angus Levas Gibb (Stephen's children), Lucas John Crompton Gibb (Ashley's child) and Damien Michael Crompton Gibb (Michael's child)....

Christine Malèvre (born 1970) is a French serial killer.
A former nurse, she was arrested in 1998 on suspicion of having killed as many as 30 patients. She confessed to some of the murders, but claimed she had done so at the request of the patients, who were all terminally ill. France, however, does not recognize a "right to die", and Malevre eventually recanted most of her confessions. The families of several of her victims strongly denied that their relatives had expressed any will to die, much less asked to Malèvre to kill them.
She was sentenced to 10 years in prison in 2003, for the murders of six patients....

Frank Sinatra Jr. (born January 10, 1944) is an American singer and conductor.
He is the son of famed musician Frank Sinatra and his first wife, Nancy Barbato.
Frank Jr. has always existed in the shadow of his far more famous father. His supporters feel that if he had been born with another name he could have achieved quite a following of his own, while his detractors have claimed that he has made his entire career off his name. Unlike his sister Nancy, he has never had a major hit recording.
The Kidnapping
He was kidnapped in December 8, 1963 at Harrah's Lake Tahoe and released two days later after his father paid out the US$240,000 ransom demanded by the kidnappers, who were later captured, prosecuted, convicted, and sentenced to long prison terms. Gladys Root represented one o...

Abigail Rose Clancy (born 10 January 1986), also known as Abi Clancy or Abbey Clancy, is an English lingerie and catwalk model who made headlines during the 2006 FIFA World Cup as the girlfriend of England football star Peter Crouch.
Born in Liverpool, Clancy was member of girl band Genie Queen, who were managed by 80s popstar Andy McCluskey from Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark. The highlight of their career was supporting boyband Blue on tour. However, the band didn’t secure a record deal and fell apart.
Britain's Next Top Model
In the summer of 2006 the second cycle of Living TV's Britain's Next Top Model hit UK screens and Clancy featured as one of the thirteen finalists in the competition, competing over 10 weeks for a desired modelling contract. Clancy was determined to go...

William Ayache (Arabic: وليام عياش‎) (born January 10, 1961 in Algiers, Algeria, by then a French colony) is a former French football defender.
Football career
He gained two championship titles in France in 1980 and 1983 with FC Nantes.
International career
He also participated at the Olympic Games in 1984 with France, winning the gold medal. He was capped 20 times for his country....

Dr. Manuel Azaña Díaz (Alcalá de Henares, near Madrid, January 10, 1880 – November 3, 1940, Montauban, France) was a Spanish politician, the second and last President of the Second Spanish Republic. He had previously served as Minister of War in the first government of the Republic (April-June 1931), and as Prime Minister between June 1931 and September 1933, prior to becoming President (May 1936 - April 1939).
Early career
Born into a rich family, he was orphaned at a very young age. He studied in the Universidad Complutense, the Cisneros Institute and the Agustinos of El Escorial. He was awarded a Lawyer's licence by the University of Zaragoza in 1897, and a doctorate by the Universidad Complutense in 1900.
In 1909 he achieved a position at the Main Directorate of the Registries a...

Steve Marlet (born January 10, 1974 in Pithiviers) is a French footballer currently playing for FC Lorient. He joined Lorient in August 2006 from VfL Wolfsburg. He has been capped 23 times and scored 6 goals for the French national team.
Height: 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Marlet holds the record for Fulham's biggest transfer fee on one player, as Fulham paid £11.5 million for the player back in January 2002. He only managed 11 goals in 54 games and this probably led to the demise of then manager Jean Tigana. He was loaned out to Olympique de Marseille for 18 months, with his sizeable contract still being paid by the English team, before his contract was cancelled.
After being released by FC lorient he went on trial with Ipswich Town.
Playing career
League matches only
Club Season...

Gisèle Marie-Louise Marguerite LaFlèche best known as Gisèle MacKenzie (January 10, 1927 - September 5, 2003) was a Canadian singer, most famous for her performances on the popular television program Your Hit Parade.
She was born Gisèle Marie-Louise Marguerite LaFlèche in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and studied violin and voice at the Royal Conservatory in Toronto, Ontario. She had her own Canadian Broadcasting Corporation radio program, Meet Gisèle, before moving to Los Angeles, California in 1951. She became a naturalized US citizen in 1955.
MacKenzie possessed a crystalline, resonant singing voice. She had perfect pitch. It has been said that she was one of the greatest female vocalists of her generation. She recorded albums and 45rpm singles on various record labels, most notably Capitol...

Marouane Chamakh (Arabic: مروان شماخ‎, born on January 10, 1984 in Tonneins, France) is a French-Moroccan football player who plays as a striker.
Despite being born in France, he is a full international player for Morocco. Chamakh currently plays for Girondins de Bordeaux in the French top flight Ligue 1.
Profile
Born in tonniens , near Bordeaux, Chamakh was a conscientious student in his youth, dividing his time up between the classroom and the football pitch. He first started playing seriously with local team Marmande and it was playing in their colours that Bordeaux scouts noticed the tricky young striker.
He jumped at the chance to move to Europe, though insisted on continuing his studies in Bordeaux, perhaps after s...

Bernard Thévenet, born January 10, 1948, in Saint-Julien-de-Civry, Saône-et-Loire (birth time source: email), is a retired French bicycle racer. He is a two-time winner of the Tour de France and known for ending the reign of five-time Tour champion Eddy Merckx. He also won the Dauphiné Libéré in 1975 and 1976.
Origins
Thévenet was born to a farming family in Saône-et-Loire in Burgundy and lived in a hamlet called Le Guidon (The Handlebar). It was there in 1961 that he saw the Tour de France for the first time, on, a 123 km stage from Nevers to Lyon. Thévenet was a choir boy in the village church. He said: "The priest brought forward the time for Mass so that we could watch the riders go by. The sun was shining on their toe-clips and the chrome on their forks. They were modern-day kni...

Keziah Jones (born Olufemi Sanyaolu on January 10, 1968 in Lagos, Nigeria) is a singer-songwriter and guitarist. He describes his musical style as “Blufunk”, which is a fusion between raw blues elements and hard, edgy funk rhythms. Also his African roots and soul music can be considered a major influence on his sound.
He is known for his distinctive style of guitarplaying, above all his percussive right-hand technique which is similar to bass player's slapping technique. He's also famous for playing most of his live shows with a bare torso.
Son of a chief in a Yoruba tribe and successful industrialist, Keziah (Olufemi) spent his early childhood in a large family in the semi-Muslim part of Nigeria, close to the city of Lagos. From a young age he was being prepared to follow his father...

Maria Mandel (January 10, 1912 – January 24, 1948) was infamous for her key role in the Holocaust as a top-ranking official at the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp where she is believed to have been directly responsible for orders to kill over 500,000 female Jews, Gypsies, and political prisoners.
Mandel was born in Munzkirchen, Austria. On October 15, 1938, she joined the camp staff as an Aufseherin at Lichtenburg, an early concentration camp in Saxony where she worked with fifty other SS women. On May 15, 1939 she along with other guards and prisoners were sent to the newly opened Ravensbrück concentration camp near Berlin. She quickly impressed her superiors and in June 1942 became an SS-Oberaufseherin. She oversaw daily roll calls, assignments for Aufseherinnen and punishments ...

Donald Jay Fagen (born January 10, 1948) is an American musician and songwriter, best known as the co-founder, lead singer, and the principal songwriter (along with partner Walter Becker) of the jazz-influenced rock band Steely Dan. Fagen is known for his use of complex jazz harmonies, elaborate arrangements, and exacting attention to detail––all anomalies in the pop-rock genre. Fagen launched a successful, if sporadic solo career in 1982, spawning three albums to date.
Career
Early life
Fagen was born in Passaic, New Jersey on January 10, 1948 to Joseph "Jerry" Fagen and his wife Elinor. The family was of the Jewish faith. Joseph worked as an accountant. From the ages of 12 to 17, Elinor sang in a hotel band in upstate New York's Catskill Mountains until bouts of stage fright (a ...

Yasmina Khadra (Arabic:ياسمينة خضراء, literally means green jasmine) is the pen name of the Algerian author Mohammed Moulessehoul (born January 10, 1955).
Moulessehoul, an officer in the Algerian army, adopted a woman's pseudonym to avoid military censorship. Despite the publication of many successful novels in Algeria, Moulessehoul only revealed his true identity in 2001 after leaving the army and going into exile and seclusion in France. Anonymity was the only way for him to survive and avoid censorship during the Algerian Civil War. In 2004, Newsweek acclaimed him as "one of the rare writers capable of giving a meaning to the violence in Algeria today."
His novel set in Afghanistan under the Taliban The Swallo...

John Robinson Jeffers (January 10, 1887–January 20, 1962) was an American poet, known for his work about the central California coast. Most of Jeffers' poetry was written in classic narrative and epic form, but today he is also known for his short verse, and considered an icon of the environmental movement.
Life
Jeffers was born in Allegheny, Pennsylvania (now part of Pittsburgh), the son of a Presbyterian minister and biblical scholar, Reverend Dr. William Hamilton Jeffers, and Annie Robinson Tuttle. His brother was Hamilton Jeffers, who became a well-known astronomer, working at Lick Observatory. His family was supportive of his interest in poetry. He traveled through Europe during his youth and attended school in Switzerland. He was a child prodigy, interested in classics and Greek ...

Nathan Moore (born Nathan Marcellus Moore, 10 January 1965, in Stamford Hill, London, England) is a singer, one time boysband member and pop idol manager.
Career
First coming to prominence by joining the boyband Brother Beyond as their lead singer, in 1987 (when the band and their record label won an auction to record a track with the successful 1980s record producers Stock, Aitken and Waterman), Moore was subsequently in the line-up of another boyband, Worlds Apart, that became chart stars in France.
After leaving the group, and rather like 1980s chart rival Craig Logan of Bros fame, Moore ventured into music management, representing a number of Pop Idol contestants, such as Hayley Evetts.
Moore recorded "If There Was Love", a duet with Kim Wilde, in 2002. The song was never rel...

Michel Henry (10 January 1922–3 July 2002) was a French philosopher and novelist. He wrote five novels and a great many philosophical works, and lectured at universities in France, Belgium, the United States of America, and Japan.
The Life and the Work of Michel Henry
Biography
Michel Henry was born in Haiphong, French Indochina (now Vietnam), and lived in French Indochina until he was seven years old. Following the death of his father, who was an officer in the French Navy, his mother and he settled in metropolitan France. While studying in Paris, he discovered a true passion for philosophy which led to a desire to make it his profession. From June 1943 onwards, he was committed to the French Resistance where he joined the maquis of the Haut Jura under the code name of Kant. He of...

John Alvin Ray (January 10, 1927 – February 24, 1990) was an American singer, songwriter, and pianist. Popular for most of the 1950s, Ray has been cited by critics as a major precursor of what would become rock and roll, for his jazz and blues-influenced music and his animated stage persona.
Early life
Ray was born in Hopewell, Oregon, spending part of his childhood on a farm, eventually moving to Portland, Oregon. Ray was of Native American origin; his great-grandmother was a full-blooded Native American and his great-grandfather was Oregon pioneer George Kirby Gay of Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England. He became deaf in his right ear at age 13 after an accident during a Boy Scout event, and later performed wearing a hearing aid. Surgery performed in New York in 1958 left him almost c...

Sapho Saaf or Sapho, born January 10, 1050 in Marrakech, is a French singer of Moroccan-Jewish descent. She started her career in rock music, but later concentrated on her North African roots, singing tunes by Umm Kulthum and working together with Pat Jabbar and the Orchestre de Nazareth.
She also published a book featuring cartoons from the Brasserie La Coupole, she also published several novels, and in 2005, she accompanied flamenco guitarist Léo Ferré on the stage. In 2006, the album "Sapho chante Léo Ferré - Ferré Flameco" followed.
Discography
2006 Sapho chante Léo Ferré - Ferré Flamenco
2003 Orients (with L'Orchestre de Nazareth)
1999 La route nue des hirondelles
1999 Sapho en concert
1997 Digital Sheikha
1996 Jardin Andalou
1994 El Atlal : Sapho Chante Oum Kalsou...

Tanya Streeter, born Tanya Dailey, January 10, 1973 in Grand Cayman, is a world champion free-diver, who made her first important breakthrough in 1998 when she bettered Deborah Andollo's Women's No Limits diving record by 10 feet, achieving a total depth of 370 feet (113 m). Streeter has been known to hold her breath under water for up to 6 minutes.
Streeter was inducted into the Women Diver's Hall of Fame in March 2000. In 2002, she broke the men's no limit world diving record by diving to a depth of 525 feet (160 m) near the Turks and Caicos Islands, a record which was surpassed later that year by French diver Loïc Leferme. In 2003 she broke the men's variable ballast world record by diving to a depth of 400 feet (122 m). She also holds several woman's world records.
Streeter was f...

Jemaine Clement (born 10 January 1974) is a New Zealand comedian, actor and musician, best known for being one half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords along with Bret McKenzie.
Early life
Clement was born in New Zealand. Raised by his Māori mother, Clement spent his formative years in the Wairarapa region of New Zealand. Moving to New Zealand's capital Wellington, where he studied drama and film at Victoria University of Wellington, Clement met Taika Waititi (a.k.a. Taika Cohen) with whom he went on to form So You're a Man and The Humourbeasts. In 2004, the Humourbeasts toured New Zealand in a stage show titled The Untold Tales of Maui, rewriting the traditional Maori legends of Māui. The duo received New Zealand's highest comedy honour, the Billy T Award.
...

Joseph McMoneagle (Born January 10, 1946, Miami, Florida) is known for his involvement in the development of Remote Viewing by U.S. Army Intelligence and the Stanford Research Institute. He was one of the original Officers recruited for the top-secret army program now known as Project Star Gate. McMoneagle claims he had a remarkable memory of very early childhood events. He grew up surrounded by alcoholism, abuse and poverty. As a child he had visions of small rabbit that would come to him at night, to comfort him when he was alone and scared, and first began to hone his psychic abilities in his teens for his own protection when he hitchhiked. He enlisted in the U.S. Army to get away. It is unknown whether he was recruited as an experimental remote viewer due to his claims of paranormal ex...

Franco Bordoni-Bisleri (January 10, 1913 in Milano - September 15, 1975 near Chiavari) was an italian aviator and racing car driver.
Bordoni's grandfather was Felice Bisleri (1851-1921) who had started and owned the family-run maker of the Ferro-China-Bisleri amaro (drink). Franco studied at Collegia San Carlo, became civil pilot (1936) but failed in his efforts to join the Italian Royal Air Force (Regia Aeronautica). Instead, he got a military aviation license in 1937. This license allowed Bordoni to fly combat missions in World War II. From 1940, he was first assigned to the Albenga Air Base during the fighting against France and was then assigned to the Italian Air Corps (Corpo Aereo Italiano) for the Battle of Britain. Bordoni also flew in Libya.
After the war, Bordoni became pre...

Dr. Gunther von Hagens (b. Gunther Liebchen, January 10, 1945) is a controversial anatomist who invented the technique for preserving biological tissue specimens called plastination. He is Director of the Body Worlds exhibition of human bodies and anatomical specimens. Von Hagens is known for his black fedora, which he wears even while performing public dissections.
He was born Gunther Gerhard Liebchen in Skalmierzyce (then called Alt-Skalden) near Kalisz, Reichsgau Wartheland, in what is now western Poland. At the age of five days his parents took him on a six-month trek west to escape the imminent Soviet occupation. His father Gerhard Liebchen had served in the German SS as a cook. Gunther grew up in East Germany. The family lived briefly in Berlin and its vicinity, before finally set...

Robert Woodrow Wilson (born January 10, 1936) is an American astronomer, Nobel laureate in physics, who with Arno Allan Penzias discovered in 1964 the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB). The award purse was also shared with a 3rd scientist, Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa for unrelated work.
While working on a new type of antenna at Bell Labs in Holmdel, New Jersey, they found a source of noise in the atmosphere that they could not explain. After removing all potential sources of noise, including pigeon droppings on the antenna, the noise was finally identified as CMB, which served as important confirmation of the Big Bang theory.
Life and work
Robert Woodrow Wilson was born on January 10, 1936, in Houston, Texas. He graduated from Lamar High School in downtown Houston and studie...

Grock (January 10, 1880 – July 14, 1959), born Charles Adrien Wettach, was a Swiss clown.
Early life
Grock was born in Loveresse, a village near Reconvilier, Switzerland. He started early as a performer, learning musicianship and acrobatic skills from his father and during summers spent with the circus in his mid-teens. He went on to become a clown, partnering first Brick in 1903, adopting the name "Grock", and then the famous clown Antonet (Umberto Guillaum). This second act was developed with the aim of making the transition from circus to music hall, the latter offering more lucrative opportunities. While not initially successful, Antonet and Grock did manage to secure a London engagement in 1911. Refining their performances according to audience response, Grock came to dominate the...

Annette von Droste-Hülshoff (IPA: ; January 10, 1797 – May 25, 1848) was a 19th century German author, and one of the most important German poets.
She was born at the family seat of Hülshoff near Münster into an aristocratic, Catholic family in Westphalia. She was educated by private tutors and began to write as a child, but did not publish any of her work until she was forty years old. Among her best-known writings are the cycle of poems Das geistliche Jahr (The Spiritual Year) and the novella Die Judenbuche (The Jew's Beech).
Her early intellectual training was largely influenced by her cousin, Clemens August Freiherr von Droste zu Vischering, who, as archbishop of Cologne, became notorious for his extreme ultramontane views (see below). She received a wider liberal education than ...

Francis Marmande (born January 10, 1945 in Bayonne) is a French author, musician and journalist for the French newspaper Le Monde since 1977. Marmande currently serves as the director of a modern literature laboratory (Littérature au présent) at University of Paris VII: Denis Diderot.
Marmande graduated in 1966 from the École Normale Supérieure in Saint-Cloud. A jazz critic, Marmande also plays double bass and has recorded with the Jac Berrocal Group. He was a contributor to Jazz Magazine from 1971 to 2000, which he also helped illustrate from 1976 to 1994.
Since 2006, he has had a regular column in Le Monde, writing on topics such as jazz, bullfighting, and literature.
Bibliography
Bataille politique, Presses Universitaires de Lyon, 1985.
L’Indifférence des ruines, Parenthès...

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